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What Leading Australian Employers are Focussing their DEI Efforts on in 2025

By Felicity Menzies3 min read
What Leading Australian Employers are Focussing their DEI Efforts on in 2025

In 2025, diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) is no longer a side conversation in Australian workplaces. It’s front and centre — driven by shifting employee and shareholder expectations, external scrutiny, legislative changes, and the link between culture and organisational performance.

And yet, many employers remain stuck in familiar patterns:

  • One-off DEI training with limited follow-through

  • DEI programs that lack traction

  • Leadership buy-in without behavioural change

The good news? Employers who are getting it right are asking better questions — and seeing stronger results.

Here’s what progressive organisations are focusing on now, and how to take your DEI work further this year.

“How Do We Make Psychological Safety Real — Not Just a Buzzword?”

Psychological safety has become a strategic priority — and rightly so. Trust, safety and belonging are foundational to innovation, team performance, and retention.

What’s working:

If your survey data shows low trust or hesitance to speak up, this is a critical entry point.

“We’ve Published Our WGEA Gender Pay Gap. What’s Next?”

Publishing gender pay gaps has prompted conversations — from boardrooms to employee forums.

What’s working:

  • Co-designed Gender Equality Action Plans (GEAPs) aligned to both data and lived experience

  • Clear strategies to address leadership pipelines, flexibility, and structural inequity

  • Shared accountability between HR, business leaders, and employee networks

If your gender pay gap is above the national average, or your narrative lacks clarity, now is the time to act.

"The Legal Landscape Is Changing — Are We Ready?:

The DEI agenda is no longer just a cultural aspiration — it’s embedded in law.

The Respect@Work reforms and the introduction of a positive duty under the Sex Discrimination Act 1984 require employers to take proactive, preventative steps to eliminate workplace sexual harassment, discrimination and victimisation.

Work health and safety (WHS) obligations also explicitly include obligations on employers to eliminate or minimise psychological harm, positioning psychological safety as both a legal and leadership responsibility.

What’s working:

If your current approach is still largely reactive, now is the time to embed preventative, people-centred solutions.

“Our Leaders Support Inclusion — But Are They Equipped to Lead It?”

Supportive intent is important — but it’s no longer enough. Leaders need the skills, language and confidence to model inclusive behaviours and intervene when it matters.

What’s working:

  • Inclusive leadership and upstander programs focused on real-world scenarios

  • Coaching and facilitated conversations to address uncertainty and resistance

  • Linking inclusion to core leadership expectations and performance measures

If your leaders are engaged but unsure how to lead inclusively, building capability is essential.

“We Started with Gender. How Do We Expand Our Focus?”

While many DEI strategies begin with gender, today’s workforce expects an intersectional approach — including First Nations inclusion, anti-racism, accessibility, LGBTIQA+ inclusion, and cultural safety.

What’s working:

  • Holistic strategies that address multiple dimensions of identity and experience

  • Lived experience leadership and employee voice embedded in program design

  • Partnerships that support internal capability and community connection

If your DEI work feels narrow or siloed, broadening your approach will improve both impact and relevance.

“We’ve Done the Training — But the Culture Hasn’t Shifted.”

Many organisations have invested in DEI learning. But real change happens when inclusive practice is embedded in the day-to-day.

What’s working:

  • Peer-led programs, communities of practice and coaching to sustain learning

  • Embedding DEI into onboarding, performance, recruitment and decision-making

  • Clear governance, metrics and accountability structures

If inclusion isn’t showing up in how decisions are made or how people work together, it’s time to look at your systems, not just your sessions.

Where to From Here?

If you’re asking these questions, you’re not alone — and you’re already on the right path.

We’re working with employers across the corporate, government and not-for-profit sectors who are:

  • Responding to the Respect@Work reforms and positive duty

  • Building psychologically safe, inclusive and high-performing teams

  • Moving from statements of commitment to sustained cultural change

If you’re looking for a trusted partner to support your DEI strategy, leadership capability or organisational transformation, I’d love to connect.

**Related Reading: **

https://cultureplusconsulting.com/dei-policy-strategy-action-plan-or-framework/

https://cultureplusconsulting.com/when-inclusion-excludes-how-well-intended-deib-efforts-can-miss-the-mark/

https://cultureplusconsulting.com/unconscious-bias-training-from-tick-a-box-to-transformational/

https://cultureplusconsulting.com/understanding-inclusion-as-employee-engagement-through-a-diversity-lens/

https://cultureplusconsulting.com/why-dei-efforts-fail-and-how-to-drive-sustainable-change/

https://cultureplusconsulting.com/making-diversity-equity-and-inclusion-business-as-usual/

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